(sāo): to smell of urine (or sweat etc), shame, bashfulness

(sāo) is a Chinese character meaning “to smell of urine (or sweat etc).” Classified as HSK Level 7-9 (HSK 3.0 Standard, CLEC 2022), it is composed of (semantic) and (phonetic). It ranks #2993 in character frequency (SUBTLEX-CH corpus).

Etymologically derived, flesh. Its radical form (meat) appears in many related characters such as (ròu, meat), (néng, can), (bèi, the back of a body or object).

Native pronunciation

Definitions

  1. to smell of urine (or sweat etc)
  2. shame
  3. bashfulness

Etymology & Origin

pictophoneticflesh

Decomposition: ⿰⺼喿 (layout: left-right)

Stroke Order

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

Practice writing with real-time feedback — trace each stroke in the correct order and build muscle memory in the HanziFeed app.

Words & Compounds

Common Compounds

WordPinyinMeaning
hài sàoto be bashful
méi xiū méi sàoshameless
sào zi(dialect) minced or diced meat (as part of a dish)
sāo qìfoul smell
sào méi dā yǎn(dialect) ashamed
sāo xīngstench
6
Total compounds
67
As first character
33
As last character
0
As middle character

appears in 6 compound words: 67 as the first character, 33 as the last, and 0 in a middle position. Compound statistics computed from SUBTLEX-CH and HSK 3.0 vocabulary data.

Strongest Collocations

Characters that most frequently co-occur with in natural Chinese text, ranked by NPMI (Normalized Pointwise Mutual Information) — a statistical measure of association strength.

ròu
0.491258 co-occurrences
xīng
0.48136 co-occurrences
chòu
0.45336 co-occurrences
hài
0.422180 co-occurrences
0.40830 co-occurrences
wèi
0.34836 co-occurrences
0.341330 co-occurrences
miàn
0.296126 co-occurrences
shān
0.289102 co-occurrences
gǎn
0.27130 co-occurrences

Idioms & Chengyu (1)

méi xiū méi sàoHSK 7+

shameless

phrase

Example Sentences

AI-Generated

字在日常生活中使用频率较低。

sāo zì zài rì cháng shēng huó zhōng shǐ yòng pín lǜ jiào dī .

The character "臊" is not commonly used in everyday life.

Tatoeba

我们没理由害

Wǒmen méi lǐyóu hàisào.

We have no reason to be ashamed.

Character Family

Homophones — Characters pronounced sāo

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 臊 (sāo) mean in Chinese?
臊 (sāo) primarily means "to smell of urine (or sweat etc)." It is classified as HSK Level 7-9, making it an expert-level character. It ranks #2993 in character frequency.
What's the difference between 臊 and 澡?
臊 (sāo) and 澡 (zǎo) are often confused. confusable. The key distinguishing feature: 肉 vs 氵 (same 喿 component).
How many strokes does 臊 have?
臊 is written with 19 strokes. The correct stroke order matters for recognition and handwriting speed — practice with the animated guide above to build proper technique.
What is the radical of 臊?
The radical associated with 臊 is 肉 (meat). This radical appears in many characters related to meat.
What are the components of 臊?
臊 is composed of: ⺼ (semantic), 喿 (phonetic). Its IDS decomposition is ⿰⺼喿 with a left-right layout. Understanding the components helps with both memorization and recognizing related characters.
What are common words containing 臊?
Common words with 臊 include: 害臊 (hài sào, "to be bashful"); 没羞没臊 (méi xiū méi sào, "shameless"); 臊子 (sào zi, "(dialect) minced or diced meat (as part of a dish)"); 臊气 (sāo qì, "foul smell"); 臊眉耷眼 (sào méi dā yǎn, "(dialect) ashamed"). There are over 6 compound words containing this character.
What characters sound the same as 臊 (sāo)?
Several characters share the pronunciation sāo: 骚 (disturb, coquettish), 扫 (to sweep (with a brush or broom)), 嫂 ((bound form) older brother's wife). Context and tones help distinguish between them in speech and writing.
Is 臊 the same in simplified and traditional Chinese?
Yes, 臊 is written the same way in both simplified and traditional Chinese.

Practice writing with real-time feedback

Trace stroke sequences, hear native pronunciation, and build lasting retention with spaced repetition in the HanziFeed app.

Character data sourced from Unihan (Unicode Consortium), SUBTLEX-CH frequency corpus (Cai & Brysbaert, 2010), and Make Me a Hanzi (stroke data). Collocation strength measured via NPMI (Normalized Pointwise Mutual Information). Verified by the HanziFeed linguistics team.

HSK classification follows the HSK 3.0 Standard (Center for Language Education and Cooperation, CLEC, 2022 revision). Idiom data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).

Data last verified: March 2026.